抗真菌
药品
抗药性
RNA干扰
生物
抗真菌药
药理学
遗传学
基因
微生物学
核糖核酸
作者
Carlos Pérez‐Arques,María Isabel Navarro-Mendoza,Ziyan Xu,Grit Walther,Joseph Heitman
标识
DOI:10.1101/2024.10.15.618540
摘要
Abstract Epimutations modify gene expression and lead to phenotypic variation while the encoding DNA sequence remains unchanged. Epimutations mediated by RNA interference (RNAi) and/or chromatin modifications can confer antifungal drug resistance and may impact virulence traits in fungi. However, whether these epigenetic modifications can be transmitted across generations following sexual reproduction was unclear. This study demonstrates that RNAi epimutations conferring antifungal drug resistance are transgenerationally inherited in the human fungal pathogen Mucor circinelloides . Our research revealed that RNAi-based antifungal resistance follows a DNA sequenceindependent, non-Mendelian inheritance pattern. Small RNAs (sRNAs) are the exclusive determinants of inheritance, transmitting drug resistance independently of other known repressive epigenetic modifications. Unique sRNA signature patterns can be traced through inheritance from parent to progeny, further supporting RNA as an alternative molecule for transmitting information across generations. Understanding how epimutations occur, propagate, and confer resistance may enable their detection in other eukaryotic pathogens, provide solutions for challenges posed by rising antimicrobial drug resistance (AMR), and also advance research on phenotypic adaptability and its evolutionary implications.
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